By state
	1	Juniper*	-	1861
	2	Ontonagon*	-	1867
	3	Nibrasca*	-	1869
	4	Kances*		-	1870
	5	Maine* 		-	1871
	6	Olympia*	-	1871
	7	Connecticut	-	1878
	8	Massachusetts	-	1882
	9	Cimarron*	-	1883
	10	Vermont		-	1884
	11	New Hampshire	-	1884
	12	Ohio		-	1884
	13	East Florida*	-	1885
	14	Illinois**	-	1887
	15	Michigan	-	1887
	16	Missouri**	-	1888
	17	Tennessee**	-	1888
	18	Indiana		-	1888
	19	Wisconsan	-	1889
	20	Virginia	-	1891
	21	Rhode Island	-	1892
	22	Delaware	-	1892
	
	Obtained nationwide by New Constitution (1892)
	
	
	
	*Women's suffrage upon admission
	**Women's suffrage upon re-admission (Richmondite state)
 
Movement history
Pre-Liberty and Union War
-1848: Seneca Falls Convention
-1850-1868: National Women's Rights Conventions
-creates a newspaper, Woman's Journal to organize and corral the movement
-1852: International Women's Rights Convention
-held in London, British Isles
-1855: organizes effort by formally creating National Women's Rights Association (NWRA)
-with state/territorial organizations beneath it with broad autonomy
-1854: Juniper Territory votes for women's suffrage
-by 1 vote
-as move to attract women settlers as well as because well-educated female pop thx to land grant college
-1856: Pembina Territory votes for women's suffrage
-very low population and very male
-1862: Nibrasca Territory votes for women's suffrage
-also here rising pressure of women's suffrage movement
-1865: Ontonagon Territory votes for women's suffrage
Liberty and Union War
-with Liberty and Union War (1868-76) attention drawn to that
-Women's Rights Conventions now not organized for time being
-NWRA declares its proud and firm support for Constitutionalists
-it being heavily tied to abolitionism and all
-during war it's heavily involved in activism, organizing, nursing, and many more
-and brings about effort to argue for women's suffrage on basis of women soldiers within Constitutional Government > Army of Kances
-NWRA campaigns heavily for amendment abolishing slavery
-gets massive number of signatures to petitions for this purpose
-unprecedented female political involvement
-1870: Kances votes for women's suffrage
-granted statehood after local Comuneros accomplish great victory
-constitutional convention held under military arms
-both women's activism and large gender gap leads the way
-1871: Maine votes for women's suffrage
-gets statehood thanks to long-term movement
-with both mainland Massachusetts and Maine under Justicialist domination it's now viable esp. to secure Justicialist victory
-women's suffrage obtained thanks to strong reform movement in area which wins by one vote
Post-Liberty and Union War
-NWRA tries to campaign for inclusion of sex in 20th amendment
-but fails
-with 22nd amendment movement splits over it formally including word male in constitution
-Lucy Stone supports it in name of black suffrage, Stanton and Anthony do not
-eventually Lucy Stone's movement does succeed in winning women's suffrage in the states
-with Antillean War (1880-4) women's suffrage orgs also focus on war effort again
-with declaration of convening of Washington Convention in 1888 the orgs unify to convince delegates
-and get good delegates elected
-eventually when held from 1889-90 by 5 votes able to pass women's suffrage portion of new constitution
-there is a wave of revulsion across the nation against this
-even in states already with women's suffrage, women are reluctant because they already have it and suffrage orgs already dissolved
-and that the portion passed with a bare majority means it's hardly a vote of confidence
-but with presidential elections decided by raw numbers, women important and doubles states' strength in them
-and Justice Party does not want to alienate women
-eventually, after a tough struggle, it is passed in 1892
-and this results in Constitution of the United States (1885) coming into law